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Following $3.6B Capital Raise, IREN Investors Debate Outlook After Jim Cramer Urges ‘Sell’

IREN Shares Fall After $3.6B Capital Raise Amid Cramer Sell Signal

IREN, the bitcoin miner turned AI compute provider, fell sharply on Tuesday and is now down nearly 50% over the past month. The company raised $3.6 billion this week through two transactions.

Approximately $1.6 billion came from a registered direct equity sale of 39.7 million shares at $41.12, expected to close on Dec. 8. The remaining $2 billion was raised through convertible debt: $1 billion of 0.25% notes due 2032 and $1 billion of 1% notes due 2033.

Shares dropped 15% on the news but edged higher in early Wednesday trading. Despite strong gains earlier this year, IREN remains roughly 50% below its record high from a month ago.

CNBC host Jim Cramer cautioned investors about companies issuing new financings, singling out IREN. “Sell any company now that is doing a financing a la IREN,” he said, noting parallels with late-cycle market behavior in 1999–2000.

IREN plans to use proceeds to repurchase $227.7 million of 2030 notes and $316.6 million of 2029 notes, removing them from conversion, and will invest $174.8 million in capped calls to limit dilution from the new convertibles.

The transactions represent a major balance sheet restructuring as IREN navigates volatile markets and hedging flows tied to its new capital structure.